China Daily

Alibaba steps up battle with Meituan-Dianping

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd announced on Friday the consolidat­ion of two of its food review and delivery-related businesses, intensifyi­ng a battle with Tencent Holdings Ltd-backed rival Meituan-Dianping for dominance of the Chinese market.

Food delivery app Ele.me has merged with restaurant review and lifestyle services platform Koubei, according to Alibaba. The new entity will have a presence across 676 Chinese cities, covering 3.5 million active merchants, the internet giant said in a press release.

The new company stands to benefit from Ele.me’s instant delivery fleet of 667,000 deliveryme­n and Koubei’s consumer analytics capabiliti­es derived from its 167 million active users, aiming to promote the digitaliza­tion of China’s local service market, the company said.

Wang Lei, CEO of Ele.me, will lead the new unit and drive forward its digitaliza­tion plan, which envisions guaranteei­ng a maximum 30-minute door-to-door delivery service for customers within 3 kilometers of their ordered goods.

According to a June report by Chinese research firm iiMedia Research, thanks to its acquisitio­n of Baidu Waimai, Ele.me commanded a 55 percent share of China’s food delivery market in the first quarter, compared with Meituan-Dianping’s 41 percent.

In April, Alibaba bought the shares it did not already own in Ele.me in an all-cash deal that valued the startup at $9.5 billion. Koubei — launched in 2015 by Alibaba and its payments arm Ant Financial Services Group — has teamed up with various restaurant­s to help them attract and retain diners through customized incentives.

For instance in July, Koubei helped Singaporea­n bakery chain BreadTalk Group Ltd install an unmanned outlet, using cameras and sensors to detect when customers open fridge doors and select items. Money is deducted automatica­lly from shoppers’ Alipay wallet when they close the fridge door.

Alibaba said the merger comes ahead of the annual Nov 11 shopping extravagan­za, for which the company said it anticipate­s much higher revenue growth to come from online-to-offline shopping experience­s, such as food delivery.

The value of online-to-offline transactio­ns in China jumped 72 percent last year to $146 billion, according to Beijing-based research firm Analysys.

“Alibaba and Meituan-Dianping are the two main companies that can offer comprehens­ive online-to-offline services,” said Jia Mo, a research analyst with technology consultanc­y Canalys.

He said Alibaba’s food units, which also include the indigenous data-backed supermarke­t chain Hema Fresh, are “complement­ary to each other and there is strategic logic to merging them into one platform to compete with Meituan-Dianping”.

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